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High Court of New Zealand Decisions |
Last Updated: 22 October 2014
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND AUCKLAND REGISTRY
CIV-2012-404-002618 [2014] NZHC 2420
BETWEEN
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JAMES GORDON NEWLANDS
Plaintiff
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AND
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SOVEREIGN ASSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
First Defendant
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AND
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BRUCE GRAHAM CORTESI Second Defendant
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AND
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PLANWISE FINANCIAL SERVICES LIMITED
Third Defendant
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On the papers:
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3 October 2014
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Appearances:
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G Keene and P Kemps for the Plaintiff
R Hern for the Second and Third Defendants
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Judgment:
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3 October 2014
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COSTS JUDGMENT OF ASSOCIATE JUDGE
SARGISSON
This judgment was delivered by me on 3 October 2014 at 3.30 p.m. pursuant to Rule 11.5 of the High Court Rules.
Registrar/Deputy Registrar
Date.......................................
Solicitors: Kemps Weir, Auckland
McElroys, Auckland
JAMES GORDON NEWLANDS v SOVEREIGN ASSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED [2014] NZHC 2420 [3 October 2014]
[1] On 1 May 2014 I made orders in respect of the second and third
defendant’s application for summary judgment. The
orders were made in the
terms set out in counsel’s joint memorandum of 30 April 2014, and were as
follows:
[2] As requested, I make final orders as follows:
a) The causes of action in contract are struck out.
c) Costs are reserved.
[2] As requested by counsel I fixed a timetable for them to file
memoranda on the issue of costs. In this judgment I deal with
the remaining
issue as to costs.
[3] The second and third defendants submit that costs should follow the
outcome in the usual way, and therefore that they should
have an order for costs
against Mr Newlands. Additionally they seek a 25% uplift on 2B costs, on the
basis that there are good reasons
to justify an uplift. Mr Newlands’
position is that if costs are awarded against him, they should be reduced
costs.
[4] There is no dispute as to the principles that govern the
application for costs. Although costs are in the overall discretion
of the
Court, the Court is obliged to follow the principles set out in High Court Rule
14.2. The starting point outlined in r 14.2(a)
is that the party who fails with
respect to an interlocutory application should pay costs to the party who
succeeds. So far as possible,
the determination of costs should be predictable
and expeditious: r 14.2(g). However, r 14.6 provides reasons to allow an
uplift
in costs otherwise payable under the High Court scale, and r 14.7
provides reasons to refuse or reduce costs.
[5] Rule 14.7(g) provides that costs may be refused or reduced if “some other reason exists which justifies the Court refusing costs or reducing costs despite the principle that the determination of costs should be predictable and expeditious. The Court of Appeal has recently stated that the “other reason” exception should be kept
limited, having regard to the policy of the cost regime and the emphasis it
places on costs following the event. Otherwise the exception
will swallow the
rule.1
[6] Counsel for the second and third defendants submits there is no
reason why costs should not follow the event in this case.
Additionally counsel
submits that “a modest uplift on scale costs (25%) is
appropriate”. Counsel
argues that Mr Newlands’ continuation
of the claim from an early point following the joinder of the second and
third
defendants was unreasonable and unmeritorious. The contention is
essentially that Mr Newlands should have accepted early
on that his case lacked
merit. Counsel points out that Mr Newlands eventually acknowledged, at the
hearing, that the contractual
causes of action in his amended claim were out of
time. Counsel submits that additionally:
(a) Mr Newlands persisted in his pleading that the negligence causes of
action accrued at a different time to the contractual
causes of action, though
there was no legally sustainable basis particularised for this.
(b) Further and more critically, Mr Newlands alleged equitable
fraud.
However, as found in the judgment, there is nothing to that effect in
any of Mr Newlands’ pleadings or evidence.
(c) Further, counsel’s submissions did not rely on knowing
concealment of the essential facts of that failure in the cause
of action, nor
did they address the key element of fraudulent concealment and the breach of
duty to disclose the failures.
(d) The defendants put Mr Newlands on notice that his causes of action
were statute barred, and
(e) That he was given the opportunity to explain on several occasions
why he was persisting.
[7] Plainly, this
is a case where in terms of the principles governing costs, costs should follow
the event. Counsel for
Mr Newlands did not press the contrary. Rather he
argues that r 14.7(g) should be invoked to reduce the cost that would ordinarily
be payable to a successful applicant for summary judgment because the second
defendant owed the plaintiff fiduciary duties, and acted
in a manner that was
inconsistent with those duties by, among other things, encouraging a
misunderstanding on the part of the plaintiff
that insurance cover would apply
if there existed any genuine reason preventing the plaintiff from continuing his
work for a period
of 3 months or more; not sending appendices to the policy
documents that would have enabled the plaintiff to ascertain early
on
that the policy was inadequate. Relevantly, the second defendant did not
file any affidavit in reply denying this conduct.
Counsel submits these factors
point to the possibility that the plaintiff’s claim, which has been
denied to him due
to a technical limitations defence, was nonetheless
meritorious. He argues that the second defendant may well be guilty of a
breach
of fiduciary duty, and may have escaped liability on a technical ground, and
that in the circumstances it would not be appropriate
to award increased
costs.
[8] In support of a reduced level of costs, “possibly
half of what the scale indicates”, counsel for
Mr Newlands relies on
the same arguments. Counsel also challenges the scale calculations of counsel
for the second and third defendants
in relation to the list of documents and
inspection of documents on discovery, on the basis that discovery and inspection
in the
present case were of modest proportions, and nowhere near as
extensive as might often be the case in the High Court.
He submits
that:
(a) An allowance of one day would be generous, and that one and a half days allocated in the High Court scale would be overly so for the second and third defendants’ list of documents, which contained only approximately 340 separate items.
(b) The plaintiff’s list of documents contained only 153 items, and
half a
day should be ample for the purposes of inspection.
(c) Accordingly counsel submits that there should, in any case,
be a reduction for discovery and inspection from four
days down to one and a
half days.
[9] The overarching submission for reduced costs is that the second
defendant has avoided a trial on the merits by way of a
technical defence. Any
award of scale costs including reduced costs for discovery and inspection,
should be then reduced further
by half.
Decision
[10] The second and third defendants were the successful parties
on their application, and as such they have a prima
facie entitlement to a full
award of costs under the High Court costs regime.
[11] I am not persuaded by Mr Newlands’ argument that there should
be a reduced award because their success turned ultimately
on a technical
defence, but for which the case would have been unsuitable for summary judgment.
The defendants’ application
was no less successful because of the
particular ground or grounds on which that success was assured.
[12] But I am also not convinced that the second and third defendants
should have an increase over and above scale costs. Though
the plaintiff
ultimately conceded that cause of action based on contract should be struck out,
he made no such concession in relation
to his case in negligence, and in that
case his arguments (particularly on the correct legal principles to be
applied) invited
consideration. Ultimately they did not persuade me, but they
were not so meritless or so hopeless as to attract the sanctions of
increased
costs.
[13] I turn then to the remaining question of whether the time allowance for discovery and inspection in the High Court scale would be excessive in the circumstances of this case. The four day allowance under band B for a Category 2
proceeding would ordinarily apply. If the actual time incurred was less
than four days, then a reduction would be warranted to those
allowed under band
A pursuant to r 14.7.
[14] In the circumstances I will allow 2B costs to the second and third
defendants for these steps, but subject to the condition
that such costs do not
exceed the actual costs incurred by them for these steps. Counsel for the
second and third defendants is
to file and serve a memorandum confirming what
the actual costs incurred for these steps were.
[15] For all other steps I will allow 2B costs.
Result
[16] I make an order for costs in favour of the second and third
defendants on a
2B basis together with disbursements to be fixed by the Registrar. Before the Registrar approves the calculation of 2B costs, counsel for the second and third defendants is to file and serve a brief memorandum confirming whether or not the
actual costs incurred for items 20 and 21 exceed 2B scale
costs.
Associate Judge Sargisson
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